![](https://media.kbin.social/60/0c/600cd15de16cc529c3e31f64a04ba7ffc965aeb6ad2cce8221ce2faa62ad79d3.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/1f910de9-62b5-43a9-8c93-94821c945577.png)
Detecting and blocking whole instances with many bots is somewhat trivial. Blocking and detecting some number of bots in an instance with 10k users, with an ever growing number of human users, is much harder.
Detecting and blocking whole instances with many bots is somewhat trivial. Blocking and detecting some number of bots in an instance with 10k users, with an ever growing number of human users, is much harder.
I think a reasonable approach would be to include little javascript mini games. “Score 50 or higher!” with no instructions provided.
edit: using a server side rendered canvas/logic, so no cheating. Damn, this is probably a million dollar idea.
See for their response: https://lemmy.ml/comment/909446
The Agora: https://sh.itjust.works/c/agora
Seems like a good way to test the concept of the Agora. Reading some comments here and elsewhere, many people appear to not be interested in democracy, and would rather have swift action from a leading group/person. I suspect this gives a hint at the fragmentation of the Fediverse, to come, where the tolerance of a single users action results in defederation. As instances grows to tens of thousands, I imagine the hunt for these people will become intense, with policing groups made to squash the wrongthink, in order to protect the federation.
Did you do performance comparisons between Wayland and X11, or is your metric subjective?
What year is it!?
I’m not sure I agree with that statement. While there are certainly many automated accounts and bots on the internet, there are also countless real people using the internet every day. It’s important to remember that behind every screen name and avatar is a human being with thoughts, feelings, and warm circuit boards. Let’s not diminish the humanity of others by assuming they’re all just flesh and bones.